Bulte’s shameless sell-out
p2p news view / p2pnet: Hollywood’s Canadian MP Sam Bulte thought she had it made when she announced a fundraiser featuring a crew of her corporate music cronies.
Wrong, as she’s finding out.
It was a shameless sell-out of a Canadian politician and potential minister of Canadian heritage to multi-national corporate interests, says Canadian producer, singer, songwriter, rock n’roll guitar player and indie label entrepreneur Neil Leyton and other Toronto indie artists >>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>
‘They are my friends’
By Neil Leyton – Fading Ways Records
It has now become public knowledge that Liberal MP Sarmite Bulte, a long-time supporter of Canadian copyright “reform” and Bill C-60, has received significant campaign funding support from several industry players including several lobbying groups and trade associations such as Access Copyright, David Basskin’s CMRRA and even, sadly, SOCAN.
While legal, these political contributions amount to an ethical conflict of interest that should be eradicated from Canadian politics. The final straw here is that the multi-national major labels’ lobbying organization in Canada, CRIA, (the Canadian RIAA) is hosting a fundraiser for Bulte four days before the election. Tickets are $250 a plate.
CRIA, via their statistics-heavy press releases, persist on manipulating opinion polls and numbers to claim that they speak for Canadian citizens and the majority of Canadian artists – nothing could be further from the truth.
In fact, the interests of intermediaries like CRIA are not the same as the interests of the musicians, songwriters and other creator groups. CRIA can no more legitimately claim to politically represent musicians, than bank owners can claim to represent those who have bank accounts.
Furthermore, CRIA’s boast that they represent more than 95% records produced and sold in Canada is misleading. In fact, they represent the interests of the “Canadian” major labels, who are in fact cultural importers (largely of US acts) rather than exporters of Canadian artists. Very often Canadian artists like Danko Jones have to sign to foreign labels in order to export their own music.
CRIA’s close ties to MP Bulte (”they are my friends”, she explained) are questionable and objectionable. Fading Ways Records believes that Canadian Heritage should be controlled by true Canadian cultural interests, not political sell-outs.
CRIA and the majors have launched a massive PR assault to convince the Canadian public that downloading and file-sharing hurts record sales – again, in the independent sector, nothing could be further from the truth.
The internet helps new fans discover new artists, and “piracy” is nothing but a scapegoat for the major label’s failing business models that date back to the booming 80s. Indie CD sales are up, while major labels’ sales are down due to the rise in the DVD market, and the high-price of sub-quality releases they peddle to the masses via huge marketing budgets.
Lastly, CRIA’s press release this past week dared to accuse the NDP of “abandoning their traditional support for artists” in order to attack the NDP Parkdale candidate, Peggy Nash. (CRIA candidate Sam Bulte’s opponent). Not true – the NDP is the only party that is aware of CRIA’s corporate attempt to hijack Canadian copyright legislation, which at this point remains the most balanced and fair copyright act when compared to the USA’s DMCA and the EU’s IP Enforcement Directive. One particular NDP candidate, Charlie Angus, is an independent musician, author and broadcaster himself. Bill C-60, which Bulte and CRIA support, and Angus criticizes, is a narrowing, one-sided piece of legislation that will inadvertently cause law-abiding citizens to break the law.
It makes copyright even more complex than it already is. Copyright being excessively complex is one of its greatest flaws, and if citizens and organizations without a team of lawyers are expected to obey it then it must be simplified rationally and in a balanced way such as that described by concerned citizens like Michael Geist. Canadians, and citizens of the world in general, are not “pirates” at all. In fact, piracy is the high-seas act of armed robbery, pillaging, murdering and raping.
We at Fading Ways find it offensive that the same word is now used to describe a social act of sharing that has traditionally been part of our culture (home-taping, mixed cassettes, etc.) and deemed acceptable for decades. What CRIA and Bulte would have us live in is an Orwellian State where present and future teens are limited to a mainstream culture of purchased goods with no room for cultural variety, diversification, or free exchange of opinions on what constitutes good music.
One example of the type of “protection” endorsed by CRIA and Bulte is the recent Sony/BMG “rootkit” type of DRM (Digital Rights Management) that essentially hi-jacked people’s computers and was defined as “malware” even by Microsoft. The EFF has recently achieved an out-of-court compensation for fans whose consumers were affected by the Sony/BMG DRM copy protected discs that they purchased.
I, and several Fading Ways Recording artists, as well as several Parkdale musical artists, hereby demonstrate their solidary with the NDP Parkdale candidate, Peggy Nash.
Also See:
Sam Bulte – Hollywood’s Canadian MP, January 4, 2006
corporate music cronies – Sam Bulte saga goes mainstream, January 6, 2006






January 10th, 2006 at 7:01 pm
Well put.
It would be nice to hear from Indie music artists, and from other creators, as to how they feel about these issues.
January 10th, 2006 at 11:11 pm
I second that.
Jon, can you get any more input from artists about this whole blow-up?
January 10th, 2006 at 11:18 pm
I’d love to. But I’m still the entire p2pnet staff and I’m over-extended as it is. BUT – if anyone would like to take on the task, I’ll sure as hell publish the results.
Cheers!
January 11th, 2006 at 12:34 am
I would like to give the perspective of a musician and songwriter on this whole copywrite thing…
In the interest of disclosing my potential biases, my band (The Pariahs) is on Neil Leyton’s Fading Ways label and I am a good friend of Neil’s. Having said that, my take on this issue is not quite the same as Neil’s, and may interest some.
First of all, I do not belive that Neil’s views and those of the (many) people who attack him are mutually exclusive. Basically the dispute boils down to this: Neil maintains that free sharing of music over the web can help artists, and that restrictive copywrite laws would hurt them. His opponents believe that the opposite is true.
I see many debates between those who believe that every free download equals a lost sale and those that think that file trading helps record sales. What’s the truth? I don’t pretend to know – probably someplace in the middle. However, I would argue that this debate is essentially beside the point. File-trading is here to stay. I see no reason to believe that lawsuits or technical restrictions will stop it – so far the traders are running rings around the record companies. How should musicians and indie record labels deal with this phenomenon?
You notice that I do not mention the question of how major labels should react. That is because I don’t care. My band will never be signed to a major label. Therefore, when Neil Leyton and Fading Ways are attacked by industry types because our tiny operation is allegedly contributing to the downfall of the ability of artists to make money from their work, I just laugh. I don’t care about the traditional business model for selling CDs. It never made me any money – I was locked out of it, like most musicians.
You might argue that Fading Ways (and myself) could make more money in the old indie environment of the 80s and 90s when digital copying was not an issue. Perhaps this is true. But waxing nostalic about the “good old days” does not help us succeed now. If file trading IS stamped out some day by technological or legal change, then this would be a discussion worth having. In any case, our actions will not influence the outcome either way, so we may as well follow our immediate interests now.
In the meantime, a small label like Fading Ways can make use of digital copying to dramatically enhance the exposure of its artists. For instance, FW distributes “Share Sampler” CDs of music that is copywrited under Creative Commons and is legal to copy and distribute. People are encouraged to share the songs in any way they care to. They like this. For a very small indie label, the challenge is not that people are stealing the music without paying -the challenge is that nobody has heard of the acts in the first place.
Major labels have a different problem. They spend millions of dollars trying to convince everybody on the planet that they really need to listen to their latest assembly-line megastar. Then people who have been exposed to this expensive media barrage can just go download the music for free. Is this a problem? Yes. Is it MY problem? Nope!
Let’s say 100 people hear about The Pariahs through sharing, but only ten buy our record. Is this ten new sales or ninety lost sales? Given that for years we pretty much only sold records to people who had seen us live, this scenario is a big improvement in my view.
Old-school record companies are being squeezed by two factors, both caused by digital technology. It used to be that unless you were independently wealthy, you needed a record deal to make a professional quality recording. This is no longer the case. It used to be that you needed major label clout to make your music widely available -this is no longer the case either. What do the majors still control? Access to mainstream media. Oops – mainstream media is now so tightly formatted and limited in scope that the vast majority of good music would never get played.
Is the record industry doomed? Will all musicians wind up washing dishes because they can’t sell their music? Could be. What can I do about it? Not much. Neither can you. If you work for a big record company, maybe we’ll wind up washing dishes together. Here’s what is different about us: I have no stake in the status quo. I am the kid who has spent his “career” with his nose pressed to the window of the candy store. Now that the glass is smashed and the store is on fire, I might as well help myself to some candy…
Loaf
That guitar player guy from The Pariahs.
January 11th, 2006 at 11:31 am
This is a great read and it would be a shame if anyone missed this, is it possible it could get posted as its own article?